The British Beekeepers Association (BBKA), registered charity 212025, was founded in 1874 and today represents the interests of 24,000 amateur beekeeper members and the 3 billion honey bees they care for.

The BBKA exists to promote and further the craft of beekeeping and to advance the education of the public in the importance of bees in the environment. It provides information to help you learn about bees in lots of different ways:

Bees for Kids

The aim of this section of our website is to help children, teachers and parents to value bees. It builds on the "Bees in the Curriculum" Schools Pack, which is endorsed by the British Beekeepers Association and commended by many working teachers, Primary School Heads and School Science Co-ordinators.

What we can learn from bees?

Studying bees adds significantly to the wider education of pupils. For example:

Bees are pollinators vital to our food chain. One third of the food we eat would not be available but for bees.

Bees, like other insects, are part of a food chain.

The social life of the honey bee colony provides a controversial start to thinking about the structure of societies.

The tools which have evolved on the limbs and mouthparts of bees are neat examples of adaptation and engineering.

The harvest from honey bees of honey, pollen, wax and propolis has nutritional, craft, manufacturing, and medical applications.

Pollination by bees is important for genetic sustainability. Genes that have evolved in other animals are important to our future, too.

In the UK about 70 crops are dependent on, or benefit from, visits from bees. In addition, bees pollinate the flowers of many plants which become part of the feed of farm animals. The economic value of honey bees and bumble bees as pollinators of commercially grown insect pollinated crops in the UK has been estimated at over £200 million per year.

Bees are in danger of disappearing from our environment. Farming practices continue to disturb the natural habitats and forage of solitary bees and bumblebees at a rate which gives them little chance for re-establishment. The honey bee is under attack from the varroa mite and it is only the treatment and care provided by beekeepers that is keeping colonies alive. Most wild honey bee colonies have died out as a result of this disease.

These factors, coupled with a decline in the number of beekeepers in the UK, have prompted the production of the 'Bees in the Curriculum' Schools pack by the British Beekeepers Association (BBKA). Attitudes to bees must change and a new generation needs to be educated into the value of bees and the threats to their existence.

Michael Gove, Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) has said advice from Expert Committee on Pesticides (ECP) means government will now back a total ban on neonicotinoid pesticides. The ECP said 'exposure to neonicotinoids under field conditions can have an unacceptable effect on honeybee health'.

The latest trustees newsletter, Bee positive 3, wants to find out if beekeeping associations would like a trailer with a built in display area and all the equipment they would need for an interactive stand at a show.